April 27, 2026
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9 min read

One of the first questions people ask before working with an interior designer is:
“How much will it cost?”
The second question usually follows immediately:
“How long will it take?”
And I understand why. When you are planning a renovation, furnishing a new home, preparing a rental property, or redesigning a space you already live in, the budget and timeline affect everything: your move-in date, your stress level, your decisions, and your expectations.
But here is the honest answer: a responsible interior designer cannot give you an exact budget or timeline without understanding the project first.
That does not mean the process has to feel unclear. It simply means that good planning starts with the right questions.
Budgets and timelines depend on the property, the scope, the level of service, the number of rooms, the condition of the space, the suppliers involved, the speed of decisions, and whether we are working with ready-made furniture, custom pieces, renovation work, or full project coordination.
So in this article, I want to answer the questions I hear most often from clients who are considering working with an interior designer like me, Vessi Andreeva.
My goal is not to overwhelm you with technical details. My goal is to help you understand what affects the process, what to prepare, and how to avoid the most common mistakes before you start spending money.
The earlier, the better — especially if you are renovating, furnishing from scratch, ordering a kitchen, planning wardrobes, changing lighting, or managing the project from abroad.
Many people contact a designer after they have already made several big decisions: they bought furniture, approved contractor changes, ordered a kitchen, chose tiles, or committed to a layout.
Sometimes those decisions work. But sometimes they create limitations that could have been avoided.
You should ideally contact an interior designer before:
A designer can help you understand the sequence of decisions. That is important because in interiors, one decision affects another.
For example, lighting affects furniture placement. Furniture placement affects sockets. Storage affects layout. Kitchen design affects appliances, plumbing, electrical work, and installation. If these decisions happen in the wrong order, the project can become more stressful and more expensive.
You do not need to have everything figured out before contacting a designer. In fact, that is the point. A good consultation helps you understand what needs to happen first.
Not immediately — and if someone gives you an exact number too quickly, be careful.
A realistic budget depends on the scope.
Are we talking about a consultation only? A room refresh? A furnishing plan? A full interior design concept? Renovation support? Procurement? Contractor coordination? A move-in-ready home?
These are very different projects.
When people ask, “How much does interior design cost?” they are often combining several different budgets into one question:
These should not be treated as one vague number. They need to be separated clearly so you understand where your money is going.
After I understand your property, goals, rooms, timeline, and desired level of support, I can help you think in realistic ranges. But an exact project cost requires more detail: measurements, drawings, supplier options, quantities, finishes, furniture selections, and confirmed scope.
This is why the first step is not “guess the final cost.” The first step is to define the project properly.
The biggest budget drivers are usually not the decorative pieces. They are the practical and technical decisions.
Here are the things that affect the budget most:
A studio apartment, a two-bedroom apartment, a family house, and a rental property all need different levels of planning, sourcing, and execution.
More rooms usually mean more furniture, more lighting, more storage, more decisions, and more coordination.
A consultation is very different from a full-service project.
You may need:
The more complete the service, the more time and responsibility the designer takes on.
Custom kitchens, wardrobes, built-in storage, bathroom vanities, and made-to-measure pieces can transform a home, but they also affect both budget and timeline.
Custom work requires measurements, technical drawings, supplier quotes, production time, installation, and sometimes adjustments after installation.
Flooring, tiles, paint, countertops, fabrics, lighting, hardware, and fixtures can vary widely in price.
The goal is not always to choose the most expensive option. The goal is to choose the right quality for the way the home will be used.
A rental property, a family home, and a holiday apartment may need different durability decisions.
Some furniture looks good online but does not last well. Some cheaper pieces are fine for low-use areas. Some items are worth investing in because they affect daily comfort.
I usually advise clients to prioritize the pieces they use every day: sofa, bed, mattress, dining chairs, lighting, storage, and kitchen function.
In Bulgaria, timelines and budgets can also be affected by supplier availability, delivery windows, installer schedules, and whether certain items are local, imported, ready-made, or custom.
This is another reason planning matters. A beautiful item is not helpful if it arrives too late for your move-in date.
Most people think the timeline depends only on the designer.
In reality, the timeline depends on several moving parts.
The biggest factors are:
Every project needs decisions: layout, style direction, materials, furniture, lighting, suppliers, budget priorities, and final approvals.
If decisions take longer, the project takes longer.
This is not a criticism — it is normal. Your home is important. But it helps to know that decision-making is part of the timeline.
Some items are available quickly. Others may take weeks or months.
Custom furniture, imported pieces, kitchens, wardrobes, lighting, and specific finishes can all have different lead times.
If renovation work is involved, the timeline depends on contractor availability, sequencing, and the condition of the property.
Even a simple-looking change can affect electrical work, plumbing, walls, flooring, or installation.
Is the property empty? Is it still under construction? Are there existing pieces that need to stay? Are measurements final? Are walls and floors ready? Are there technical constraints?
A space that is not ready for accurate measurements can slow down the next steps.
If you are not in Bulgaria full-time, the project can absolutely still work — but it needs a clear communication structure.
Remote projects need:
Without structure, remote projects become stressful quickly.
There is no one answer, but here is a practical way to think about it.
This can be short and focused. It is best when you need clarity, priorities, direction, or help deciding what to do next.
You might use a consultation to discuss:
A room refresh can be faster than a full project, but it still depends on sourcing and delivery.
If we are changing furniture, lighting, textiles, artwork, and styling — but not renovating — the timeline is usually much simpler than a construction-based project.
A full furnishing project often takes several weeks to a few months, depending on the number of rooms, supplier availability, custom pieces, and how quickly decisions are made.
If the property needs a kitchen, wardrobes, lighting, furniture, curtains, decor, and installation coordination, it should not be planned as a “quick shopping list.”
It is a project.
This takes longer because there are more dependencies.
Renovation work may involve contractors, technical plans, demolition, electrical work, plumbing, flooring, painting, custom furniture, installation, deliveries, and final fixes.
The biggest mistake is planning the timeline based on the most optimistic scenario. A realistic timeline is calmer, safer, and usually more successful.
Yes — and many clients need exactly that kind of support.
If you are abroad, traveling, relocating, or only in Bulgaria for short periods, the process needs to be organized around clear approvals and practical updates.
A remote-friendly process may include:
The goal is not for you to be involved in every tiny detail. The goal is for you to make the important decisions with confidence, while the process stays organized.
This is especially helpful for expats, returnees, investors, and busy professionals who cannot spend every day visiting showrooms, calling suppliers, or checking deliveries.
It depends on how much support you need.
A consultation is best if you want clarity before making decisions. It can help you understand your budget, timeline, layout priorities, furnishing strategy, or next steps.
You may only need a consultation if:
Full-service interior design is better if you want support from concept to completion.
You may need full service if:
There is no “better” option in general. There is only the right option for your situation.
Sometimes it can be done faster — but not always without consequences.
Good interiors require sequencing. Measurements need to be correct. Suppliers need to be checked. Quotes need to be compared. Materials need to be chosen. Orders need to be placed. Deliveries need to be scheduled. Installations need to happen in the right order. Final fixes need to be handled.
If everything is rushed, the risk of mistakes increases.
Common rushed-project problems include:
A calm process does not mean a slow process. It means the project has structure.
The goal is to move efficiently without creating avoidable rework.
You do not need to prepare a perfect brief. But a few details make the first conversation much more useful.
Before a consultation, try to gather:
Think about what you want the space to do.
For example:
Share your ideal move-in date or completion date, even if you are not sure it is realistic yet.
It is better to discuss this early than to discover too late that custom work, delivery, or installation needs more time.
You do not need to know the exact number, but it helps to know what range feels comfortable and what range feels too much.
A designer can help you prioritize, but only if there is honest budget context.
Reference images are helpful, but they do not need to be perfect. Even a few examples of what you like and dislike can make the direction clearer.
The most useful references are not only about style. They can also show:
After the first conversation, the next step depends on what you need.
Usually, we clarify:
From there, we can decide the best way to work together.
For some clients, the next step is a focused design consultation. For others, it is a furnishing plan, a full design concept, supplier sourcing, or a more complete project process.
The important thing is that the next step should be clear. You should understand what is included, what decisions are needed, and what the process will look like.
That is completely normal.
Many clients do not know how to describe their style. They only know what they do not want: cold, cluttered, cheap-looking, impractical, too trendy, too dark, too plain.
That is enough to start.
A designer helps translate your preferences into a direction that works for your actual home. Style is not just a Pinterest board. It needs to match the property, the light, the layout, the budget, and your daily life.
For me, the goal is usually a home that feels elevated and functional — calm, beautiful, practical, and not overwhelming.
The biggest mistake is buying too much too early.
A sofa before the layout is clear. A kitchen before the storage needs are understood. Lighting before the furniture plan. Decor before the main pieces are chosen. Tiles before the full palette is considered.
These decisions may seem separate, but they are connected.
If you want a smoother project, start with the plan:
This protects the result and the budget.
Interior design budgets and timelines can feel confusing because every project is different.
But they are not random.
They depend on scope, property size, custom work, suppliers, decisions, location, execution, and how much support you need.
The best time to speak with a designer is before you feel overwhelmed — and before you start making expensive decisions that may need to be changed later.
If you are planning a renovation, furnishing a home, preparing a rental, or managing a property from abroad, a consultation can help you understand what is realistic, what to prioritize, and how to move forward with more confidence.
Bring your property details, your timeline, your budget comfort zone, and your questions.
I will help you map the next steps clearly.
Book a consultation and let’s look at your project scope, budget range, and timeline before you start making expensive decisions.
Your Favourite Bulgarian-American, Vessi Andreeva

